The indoor basketball court in the basement has three hoops and is also accessible from a staircase in the master bedroom. There are windows from the main floor of the house overlooking the court. Photo provided by Nick Rasmussen

Naturally, the focal point of retired Pacers All-Star Rik Smits' sprawling home in Zionsville is an indoor basketball court.

It's a regulation half-court in the basement with three hoops, a scoreboard, a camera connected to all the televisions in the house and windows so people can watch from the exercise room or from the main-floor master bedroom. There's also a staircase from the master bedroom, and Smits said he would go down to shoot hoops when he couldn't sleep.

The Dunking Dutchman had the court built when remodeling and expanding the 11,000-square-foot house in 2014. He bought the house, which sits on a 12.5-acre property, in 1998.

Two barns on the property serve as garages, with a lift and loft storage for motorbikes. Smits said he liked to work on his own cars. He would ride his motorbikes on a track toward the back of the huge property.

Smits and Jarrett have moved to Arizona because Smits said he appreciates that there is "hardly any rain."

"I'll miss a lot of things about Indiana," said Smits, figuring he'd end up coming back every couple months because he has so many friends here. "I do miss going to the Pacers games and interacting with the fans."

But he said the weather is not one of the things he'll miss.

Smits moved to the United States in 1984 to attend Marist College in New York. He was drafted by the Pacers as No. 2 overall pick in 1988.

The 1998 NBA All-Star played his entire NBA career with the Pacers. In 10 of his 12 seasons, the Pacers made the playoffs. Smits reached the NBA Finals with the Pacers in 2000, where they lost to the Los Angeles Lakers.